Hey Dank! I'm sure we can eliminate any nute' issues; while many bugs will munch on leaves, none will be so small you can't see them and still leave holes that large, in fact, few chew out holes away from the edges (earwigs, grasshoppers, rarely caterpillars); notice that there are chlorotic (weak to no pigment) spots with no holes , and some with,... this looks like physical damage, likely happened earlier... a similar thing happened to some of my outdoor girls too, when I gave an Fe spray on a foggy day, but the fog cleared suddenly before the leaves could fully dry; what happens is the little droplet of water (or worse, some foliar soln.) acts as a lens, and can burn or damage the tissue under it, often a very small point; damage may not be obvious at first; if it happens on a newer, still growing leaf, the dead tissue doesn't expand and grow with the rest, causing holes to form as the tissue grows away from the perimeter surrounding the burnt area... another possibility, it may have simply caught some overspray of something the plant really doesn't like, resulting in the same thing I just described... Soooo, go on a serious top and bottom bug hunt; keep in mind bigger bugs are highly mobile and may not be around the scene of the crime at that time, usually hiding during the day (earwigs in particular), so look under pot, in crevasses, etc... try and recall if something got sprayed nearby, not necessarily on the plant itself (pesticides, lube, etc.), or if the plant got wet on a sunny day... it may look ugly, bro, but the plant will be fine...